Received signal to noise indicator

ABSTRACT

A method and device may be used to produce a received interference value in wireless communications. The device may include one or more components to measure a received power of a channel and measure an average noise plus interference power of the channel. The device may include a processor configured to calculate a received signal to noise indicator (RSNI) value. The RSNI may be based on the measured received power and the measured average noise plus interference power.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/814,690, filed on Jun. 14, 2010, which issued on Feb. 14, 2012 as U.S. Pat. No. 8,116,692, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/328,994, filed on Jan. 10, 2006, which issued on Jun. 15, 2010 as U.S. Pat. No. 7,738,848, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/729,332, filed on Dec. 5, 2003, which claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/440,073, filed on Jan. 14, 2003, which are hereby incorporated by reference.

TECHNOLOGY FIELD

This application relates generally to wireless communications. In particular, the application relates to measurements with respect to such communications.

BACKGROUND

This specification includes the following acronyms:

AP access point BER bit error rate CCK complementary code keying (RF modulation) DSSS direct sequence spread spectrum EIRP equivalent isotropically radiated power ERP effective radiated power FEC forward error correction FER frame error rate MIB management information base OFDM orthogonal frequency division multiplexing PBCC packet binary convolution coding PHY physical layer PLCP physical layer conversion protocol PMD physical medium dependent PPDU PLCP protocol data unit PSK phase shift keying PSNI perceived signal to noise indication RPI received power indicator RSSI received signal strength indicator SQ signal quality STA station

The current IEEE standard 802.11 is entrusted with the task of providing interfaces, measurements, and mechanisms to support higher layer functions for efficient network management. Presently, the 802.11 standard has defined several physical parameters, none of which is completely suitable for network management purposes. One example of a measurable parameter is received signal strength indicator (RSSI), which is a reportable parameter for each received frame but is not quantified in the standards, and is not fully specified. The standards do include certain definitions in the context of RSSI, but it remains that RSSI poses certain limitations for use in network management since RSSI parameters from different stations (STAs) may not be uniformly defined and thus are not comparable.

A second suggested measurable parameter is the signal quality (SQ), which also happens to be an unquantized indicator of code synchronization, but is only applicable to the DSSS PHY modulation and is not applicable to OFDM PHY modulations. Yet another measurable parameter is the RPI histogram, which, even though quantized and specified, cannot make target measurements on any AP. RPI histograms measure channel power from all sources including the 802.11 sources, radars, and all other interference sources, which is not helpful for relying on the RPI histogram as a controlling parameter.

Current standards define received signal strength indication based mainly on measurement of AP signals:

(1) on the same channel, same physical layer, and same station; and

(2) on different channels, same physical layer, and same station.

Significantly, measurements involving different physical layers and the same or different stations, even though required, are not presently addressed in the standards.

Network management needs comparative PHY measurements for use in handoff decisions, for example. The following types of comparative PHY measurements are made.

1. To compare AP signals on the same channel, the same PHY, in the same STA.

2. To compare AP signals on the same channel, the same PHY, in different STAs.

3. To compare AP signals on different channels, the same PHY, in the same STA.

4. To compare AP signals on different channels, the same PHY, in different STAs.

5. To compare AP signals on different PHYs in different STAs.

6. To compare AP signals on different PHYs in the same STA. Comparative measurements are crucial to handoff decisions for Network Management.

RSSI, as currently defined, only addresses categories (1) and (3) above. The RSSI is a measure of the RF energy received by the DSSS PHY or the OFDM PHY. RSSI indications of up to eight bits (256 levels) are supported. The allowed values for RSSI range from 0 through RSSI maximum. This parameter is a measure by the PHY sublayers of the energy observed at the antenna used to receive the current PPDU. RSSI is measured during the reception of the PLCP preamble. RSSI is intended to be used in a relative manner, and it is a monotonically increasing function of the received power.

CCK, ER-PBCC: the 8-bit value of RSSI as described in 18.4.5.11.

ERP-OFDM, DSSS-OFDM, the 8 bit value is in the range of 0 to RSSI maximum as described in 17.2.3.2.

Some limitations of the RSSI indicator are: RSSI is a monotonic, relative indicator of power at the antenna connector, which indicates sum of desired signal, noise, and interference powers. In high interference environments, RSSI is not an adequate indicator of desired signal quality. RSSI is not fully specified: there are no unit definitions and no performance requirements (accuracy, fidelity, testability). Since so little about RSSI is specified, it must be assumed that widely variant implementations already exist. It is not possible to compare RSSIs from different products and perhaps not even from different channels/bands within the same product.

Although RSSI has limited use for evaluating AP options within a given PHY, it is not useful in comparing different PHYs. RSSI must be rescaled for DSSS and OFDM PHYs. RSSI is clearly not useable by network management for load balancing or load shifting and RSSI from one STA does not relate to RSSI from any other STA.

SUMMARY

A method and device may be used to produce a received interference value in wireless communications. The device may include one or more components to measure a received power of a channel and measure an average noise plus interference power of the channel. The device may include a processor configured to calculate a received signal to noise indicator (RSNI) value. The RSNI may be based on the measured received power and the measured average noise plus interference power.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

A more detailed understanding of the invention may be had from the following description of preferred embodiments, given by way of example and to be understood in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein:

FIG. 1 shows the options for PHY measurements;

FIG. 1 a is a flow diagram showing a technique for deriving an input to the FEC decoder;

FIG. 2 shows PSNI specified on BER curves; and

FIG. 3 shows example PSNI specification points.

FIG. 4 is a simplified block diagram of physical layer processing in a receiver.

FIG. 5 is a simplified block diagram of an embodiment for measuring a signal to noise indicator, such as a received signal to noise indicator (RSNI).

FIG. 6 is a flow diagram of RSNI calculation.

FIG. 7 is an illustration of a comparison of a RCPI measurements and the resulting forward error rate (FER).

FIG. 8 is an illustration of the signal to noise ratio (SNR) of RCPI and PSNI.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

It is desirable to provide a method of network management, considering comparative measurements of AP signals in all varying situations including different physical layers and the same or different stations.

Described hereinafter is a demodulator-specific, subjective estimator of perceived S/(N+I) specified by means of a quantized FER indication. The following is noted in the context of the description of the exemplary embodiment.

All digital demodulators use tracking loops and complex post-processing to demodulate received symbols. Many internal demodulator parameters are proportional to perceived S/(N+I). Some examples are:

PSK: baseband phase jitter, base band Error Vector Magnitude (EVM)

DSSS: spreading code correlation quality

OFDM: frequency tracking and channel tracking stability

Demodulator internal parameters are available on a frame-by-frame basis. Demodulator parameters proportional to analog S/(N+I) are invariant with respect to data rates. The same parameter may be used at any data rate.

Demodulator internal parameters may be specified and calibrated in a controlled environment with respect to actual FER performance at two or more operating points defined by rate, modulation, and FEC. Such demodulator internal parameters estimate FER performance in both interference environments and interference-free (noise only) environments and may be used as the basis for PSNI. For PSNI to be a useful indicator it is not necessary to specify which demodulator internal parameter to use as the basis for the indicator, but it is sufficient to only specify how the quantized indicator relates to FER.

The following features are to be noted in connection with the inventive use of PSNI for network management:

PSNI is specified like RSSI as an 8-bit unsigned value, monotonically increasing with increasing S/(N+I).

PSNI is logarithmically scaled to perceived S/(N+I). PSNI is based on a demodulator internal parameter which provides a fast estimator for FER.

Specify PSNI output indication across a range defined by two signal quality points: first point at a minimum useable signal quality level, second point at a maximum signal quality level.

Specify the output value and accuracy of the output value for at least two FER points, and at least one FER point for each valid modulation, FEC, and data rate combination.

PSNI range may span the lower 40 db portion of the operating range of S/(N+I) to cover high FERs at data rates from 1 to 54 Mbps, but higher or lower range spans may be used.

The PSNI indicator is a measure of the perceived, post-processing signal-to-noise-plus-interference (S/(N+I)) ratio in the demodulator. The allowed values for the Perceived Signal to Noise Indicator (PSNI) parameter are in the range from 0 through 255 (i.e., eight binary bits). This parameter is a measure by the PHY sublayer of the perceived signal quality observed after RF downconversion, and is derived from internal digital signal processing parameters of a demodulator used to receive the current frame. PSNI is measured over the PLCP preamble and over the entire received frame. PSNI is intended to be used in a relative manner, and it is a monotonically increasing, logarithmic function of the observed S/(N+I). PSNI accuracy and range are specified at a minimum of two different FER operating conditions. FIG. 3 supplies example specification points for a PSNI scaled to a 43 dB range.

FIG. 1 shows the options for PHY measurements, which can be used for a PSNI indicator. Referring to the receiver 10 in FIG. 1, the following general comments are valid for a wide range of modern modulation and coding techniques. The signal to noise ratio at points A and B are nominally the same and may differ slightly due to added losses in the radio front end 12. The signal to noise ratio after the analog to digital conversion at A/D converter 14 is also nominally the same value, with minor additions to the noise associated with quantization error.

Therefore, in a high performance system, there is only a minor difference between the signal to noise ratio at point A and that at the input to demodulator 16 and tracking loops. In a low complexity and low performance system, the signal to noise ratio difference between point A and the input to demodulator 16 may be significant. The signal to noise ratio at the output of demodulator 16 (point C) is only indirectly observable by means of the bit error rate (BER). The BER at point C relates to the signal to noise ratio at point B according to a theoretical demodulation performance curve which is adjusted to account for actual demodulator implementation losses.

Similarly, the BER at the output of FEC decoder 18 (point D) relates to the FEC decoder input according to a theoretical FEC decoder performance curve which is adjusted to account for actual FEC decoder implementation losses. The frame error rate (FER) at point E at the output of the frame check function 20 is a direct mathematical function of the BER and the error distribution statistics at point D. There are normally no implementation losses associated with the frame check. In general, for low BERs, the FER is equal to the BER multiplied by the frame size in bits.

The frame check function 20 of receiver 10 in FIG. 1 may be implemented with or without a frame parity check. In most practical designs, each frame contains a parity check, which indicates (with high reliability) whether the block was received correctly or not. The most common parity check is a cyclic redundancy check (CRC), but other techniques are possible and acceptable. If no frame parity check is used, the FER may be estimated using a derived BER from the functioning of the FEC decoder 18. Deriving the BER input from the FEC decoder 18 may be obtained using a well known process, summarized as follows (see FIG. 1 a):

The output of the FEC decoder is generally correct. Therefore, this output is obtained and stored (steps S1 and S2). The FEC encoding rules are used to create a replica of the correct input bits (step S3) and each bit is compared to the corresponding bit that was actually input to the FEC decoder and stored (step S4). A count is increased for each comparison (step S5). Each disagreement (step S6) represents an input bit error (step S7) which is accumulated. This derived BER (steps S9, S10) may then be used with the actual performance curve of the FEC decoder to estimate observed FER (step S11). The comparisons (error or no error—step S6) are continued until a count N is reached (step S8), at which time the count at step S7 is identified as the BER (step S9).

In this way, using the actual implementation losses with the theoretical performance curves allows one to relate the signal to noise measurements at any point to the signal to noise measurement at any other point.

From a network management point of view, the signal quality delivered to the user is best represented by the actual FER or observed FER (point E). The PSNI concept provides an indicator which directly relates to observed FER for all STAs, regardless of each STA's different implementation loss. This is accomplished by 1) basing the PSNI on the measurement of an internal demodulator parameter, 2) specifying the PSNI indicator values with respect to observed FER at particular data rate/demodulation/FEC combination points, and 3) adjusting the internal demodulator parameter measurement to account for actual FEC decoder losses which occur downstream from the measurement point. By using a measurement point internal to the demodulator, the measured signal quality already includes the effects of the STA front end losses. By specifying the PSNI indicator with respect to observed FER, actual demodulator losses are included. By adjusting the demodulator measurement to account for actual FEC decoder losses, the validity of the indicator is preserved for all FEC decoders which the STA may use.

Since PSNI is based on an internal demodulator parameter, it can be measured and reported on a frame-by-frame basis. BER or FER measurements at points C or E require thousands of frames for accurate measurement. Therefore PSNI is a practical, fast, and available indictor of observed signal quality.

Measurements of analog signal to noise at points A or B can be performed quickly, yet without also knowing the sum of all the implementation losses further downstream, they cannot be accurately related to observed FER at point E.

In these ways, the inventive use of PSNI for network management is more practical to implement, faster to measure, requires no knowledge of STA implementation, and is thus an improvement over the alternatives discussed here.

FIG. 2 shows PSNI specified on BER curves in the context of the invention. FIG. 3 illustrates example specification points for a PSNI scaled to a 43 dB range.

The advantages of PSNI over RSSI include the following: The definition of PSNI meets the requirements for RSSI in that the PSNI is an 8-bit unsigned value (for DSSS PHYs) and is proportional to received signal power. PSNI may be reported in any data field calling for RSSI, which makes the PSNI indicator broadly applicable as an interlayer frame quality measurement. PSNI MIB entries and reporting/posting may further be mandated in 802.11 to make the PSNI improvements available to higher layers.

The foregoing is a description of an exemplary embodiment of the PSNI indicator and method of network management. It is envisaged that the invention is applicable to all modes of transmission including TDD, FDD, CDMA, and other modes without exception. It is also conceivable that variations of the described PSNI indicator and method with suitable modifications are conceivable. All such modifications and variations are envisaged to be within the purview of the invention.

FIG. 4 is a simplified block diagram of physical layer processing in a receiver. The receiver can be in a wireless transmit/receive unit (WTRU) or a base station. In the exemplary embodiment, the receiver is used in an IEEE 802 environment station, such as 802.11a, b, g or n station. The following description is in the context of the exemplary embodiment. However, in other embodiments, the receiver can apply to other wireless standards and to other receivers, such as in an access point or converged technology device.

In FIG. 4, an antenna 900 receives a total radio frequency (RF) power. As illustrated at the antenna connector at point A, the total RF power is a combination of the signal (S)+noise (N)+interference (I) from each access point (AP) and the N+I from each channel. A radio front end 902 processes this received signal and produces a baseband (BB) signal at point B. The quality of this signal can be represented as S/(N+I). The baseband signal is converted from analog to digital by an analog to digital converter (A/D). A demodulator and tracking loops 906 demodulates the digital signal producing a demodulated signal. The configuration of the demodulator and tracking loops 906 is based on the specific physical layer protocol being used. Typically, the demodulator and tracking loops 906 feedback gain values to the radio front end 902 to control a gain of the automatic gain control.

At point C, the quality of the output of the demodulator and tracking loops 906 can be measured as a bit error rate (BER) at each data rate from each AP. For some physical layer implementations, a forward error correction (FEC) decoder 908 is used. At point D, the quality of the output of the FEC 908 can be measured by the BER as well. A frame check device 910 checks each frame of data for errors, such as by using a circular redundancy check (CRC). A quality at the output of the frame check device 910 can be measured as the frame error rate (FER) at each data rate from each access point.

FIG. 5 is a simplified block diagram of an embodiment for measuring a signal to noise indicator, such as a received signal to noise indicator (RSNI). An antenna 912 receives the total RF power. At the antenna connector 914, a received channel power measurement device 916 measures the received channel power indicator (RCPI). RCPI is a measurement of the RF signal, which includes noise and interference. Although the measurement of the RCPI is shown as being at the antenna connector, in alternate embodiments, measurements at another point in the physical layer processing are extrapolated to represent the RCPI at the antenna connector 914. Accordingly, the RCPI, although measured by another technique, is effectively a measurement at the antenna connector.

An average noise plus interference (ANPI) value is measured by an ANPI measurement device 918 at the antenna connector 914. Although illustrated as being measured at the antenna connector, the ANPI may be measured at another point in the physical layer processing and extrapolated to represent the value at the antenna connector. The ANPI is a value representing the average noise plus interference power on the measured channel. In one embodiment, ANPI is measured during the measurement duration when NAV is equal to zero or, in other word, when the virtual carrier sense (CS) mechanism indicates an idle channel. A preferred value for ANPI is defined in dbm using the same units as for RCPI. In one embodiment, ANPI may be derived as a summary metric from the noise histogram by calculating a weighted average of the histogram bin power levels. In an exemplary embodiment, ANPI may be calculated by a weighted average for the reported RPI densities assuming noise power to be the mid range value for each of the nine defined ranges for the RPI levels, such as defined in Table 1, although other ANPI calculation techniques may be used.

TABLE 1 RPI RPI Level (dBm) 0        RPI ≦ 92 1 −92 < RPI ≦ −87 2 −87 < RPI ≦ −82 3 −82 < RPI ≦ −77 4 −77 < RPI ≦ −72 5 −72 < RPI ≦ −67 6 −67 < RPI ≦ −62 7 −62 < RPI ≦ −57 8 −57 < RPI

In an 802.11 environment, it is difficult to derive a neutral interference power measurement, due to the CSMA/CA and time-varying interference levels that other wireless systems typically do not have. By converting the interference power histograms into a scalar value provides a more meaningful useful measure of the interference level.

Using the measured RCPI and ANPI, a received signal to noise indicator (RSNI) is measured. The RSNI value is a received signal to noise measurement for a received frame at the antenna connector 914, such as the currently in use antenna connector. This value is preferably reported in an RSNI field, such as to an access point. The RSNI is added to a beacon report, frame report and reassociation response. The RSNI is the received signal to noise plus interference ratio derived from the measured RCPI and ANPI. Preferably, the ANPI is the most recent ANPI value measured on the channel used to receive the frame; however, other techniques may be used. An exemplary embodiment of a derivation of RSNI is a ratio of the received signal power (RCPI−ANPI) over the noise plus interference power (ANPI), expressed in db, such as in half db steps. For a preferred range of −10 db to +118 db, RSNI=[(ratio in db)+10)*2]. The ratio is (RCPI−ANPI)/ANPI. This ratio is preferably defined at the medium access control (MAC) layer.

FIG. 5 illustrates one embodiment of a circuit from calculating the ratio for RSNI. A subtractor 920 subtracts the ANPI from the RCPI, producing RCPI−ANPI. This value is divided by the ANPI by a divider 922, producing the ratio for RSNI. This ratio is typically scaled to produce the RSNI value for the preferred range, such as to the preferred range of −10 dB to +118 db. Although the circuit in FIG. 5 is illustrated as being a subtractor 920 and a divider 922, other devices can be used to perform these calculations, such as a processor.

FIG. 6 is a flow diagram of RSNI calculation. In step 924, the RCPI is effectively measured so as to represent the RCPI at the antenna connector. In step 926, the ANPI is effectively measure so as to represent the ANPI at the antenna connector. In step 928, RSNI is calculated from the RCPI and ANPI.

In some implementations, RSNI can be used as an effective comparative tool to evaluate the delivered signal quality between stations. Because RSNI is measured at the antenna connector it provides a fair evaluation between stations. Various stations may have different RF/demodulation implementations, which can skew the results downstream. Although FER measurements at point E in FIG. 4 can be used, that value cannot be measured frame by frame. FER can only be accurately measured over 100s to 1000s of frames. Also, FERs are comparable only at the same frame size and data rate. FIG. 7 is an illustration of a comparison of a RCPI measurement at A and the resulting FER if the signal is kept to the same objective/subjective SNR for a Good, Medium and Marginal quality station. As illustrated on the left of the chart, all three stations have the same RCPI and the same objective SNR. However, the actual FERs differ greatly based on the physical layer processing quality of the station. On the right side, using the RSNI to maintain a same subjective SNR, the RCPI at A vary, but the FERs are equivalent for the various stations. Accordingly, RSNI is a tool that may be used to better allocate resources to stations of varying quality. FIG. 8 illustrates the SNR relation of RCPI and PSNI in the demodulator. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method for use in a receiver for reporting a received signal to noise ratio, the method comprising: measuring a received power of a channel; measuring an average noise plus interference power of the channel; calculating a received signal to noise indicator (RSNI) value based on the measured received power and the measured average noise plus interference power, wherein calculating the RNSI value further comprises: subtracting the measured average noise plus interference power from the measured received power to determine a difference, dividing the difference by the measured average noise plus interference to determine the RNSI value; and reporting the RSNI value to an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 802.11 access point.
 2. The method of claim 1 wherein the RSNI value is included in a field of a beacon report.
 3. The method of claim 1 wherein the RSNI value is included in a field of a frame report.
 4. The method of claim 1 wherein the RSNI value is included in a field of a reassociation response.
 5. The method of claim 1 wherein the received power and the average noise plus interference power are measured at an antenna connector.
 6. The method of claim 1 further comprising: scaling the RSNI value for a desired range.
 7. The method of claim 1 wherein the measured received power is a measurement of a radio frequency (RF) signal that includes noise and interference.
 8. The method of claim 1 wherein the RSNI value is in a range of −10 db to +118 db.
 9. The method of claim 1 further comprising: transmitting the RSNI value in a management frame or a control frame.
 10. A receiver comprising: a first device configured to measure a received power of a channel; a second device configured to measure an average noise plus interference power of the channel; a processor configured to calculate a received signal to noise indicator (RSNI) value based on the measured received power and the measured average noise plus interference power, wherein the processor calculates the RNSI value by subtracting the measured average noise plus interference power from the measured received power to determine a difference, and dividing the difference by the measured average noise plus interference; and a third device configured to report the RSNI value to an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineer is (IEEE) 802.11 device.
 11. The receiver of claim 10 wherein the processor is further configured to include the RSNI value in a field of a beacon report.
 12. The receiver of claim 10 wherein the processor is further configured to include the RSNI value in a field of a frame report.
 13. The receiver of claim 10 wherein the processor is further configured to include the RSNI value in a field of a reassociation response.
 14. The receiver of claim 10 wherein the received power and the average noise plus interference power are measured at an antenna connector.
 15. The receiver of claim 10 wherein the processor is further configured to scale the RSNI value for a desired range.
 16. The receiver of claim 10 wherein the measured received power is a measurement of a radio frequency (RF) signal that includes noise and interference.
 17. The receiver of claim 10 wherein the receiver is a wireless transmit/receive unit (WTRU).
 18. The receiver of claim 10 wherein the receiver is a base station. 